Animate RSA – The RSA Animate series was conceived as an innovative, accessible and unique way of illustrating and sharing the world-changing ideas from the Royal Society of Art’s public events programme. (Cross-postings)

Dan Bailey – Post-Doctoral Fellow at the Sheffield Political Economy Research Intitute (SPERI)

Andrew Baker – Department of Politics and Sheffield Political Economy Research Institute (SPERI), University of Sheffield

Chris Bambery – Author and broadcaster. Co-author (with George Kerevan) of Catalonia Reborn: How Catalonia Took on the Corrupt Spanish State and the Legacy of Franco (Luath Press, May 2018)

João Paulo Batalha – Social activist, founding member of Transparency International Portugal

Kate Bayliss – School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London

Mark Blyth – Author, Researcher, Educator, and Consultant on International Political Economy, Brown University, Author of “Austerity: The History of a Dangerous Idea”

Fran Boait – Executive Director of Positive Money

Clea Bourne – Lecturer, Promotional Media, Goldsmiths, University of London

Einar Braathen – Political scientist, Norwegian Institute for Urban and Regional Research (NIBR)

Karl Brenke – Economist, German Institute for Economics (DIW)

Martin Cames – Öko Institut

Victoria Canning – Lecturer in Criminology at The Open University, currently leads an ESRC project investigating gendered harms in asylum in Britain, Denmark and the UK in collaboration with the Danish Institute Against Torture.

Andrea Lorenzo Capussela – Expert in Competition Policy, State Building and Corruption

Sergio Cesaratto – Professor of Growth and Development Economics and of Monetary and Fiscal Policies in the European Monetary Union, University of Siena

Steven Forti – Associate Professor for history at the Universitat Autonomia de Barcelona (UAB)

Guido Franzinetti – Research Fellow and Lecturer in Contemporary European History and in East European History at the Faculty of Political Science, University of Eastern Piedmont “Amedeo Avogadro” (Alessandria), Italy

Daniela Gabor – Economist, University of the West of England, Bristol

Lina Gálvez – Professor of Economic History and Gender Studies at Pablo de Olavide University, Seville

Nadia Garbellini – Economist, Universita degli Studi di Pavia

Joanna Gilmore – Lecturer in Law, York Law School, University of York

Eliane Glaser – Writer, lecturer and author of Get Real: How to See Through the Hype, Spin and Lies of Modern Life. Her new book, “Anti-Politics”, will be published in 2018.

Kate Pickett – Professor of Epidemiology, University Champion for Research on Justice and Equality, and Deputy Director of the Centre for Future Health, University of York

Zoltan Pogátsa – Lecturer in political economy, University of West Hungary, Central European University

Post-Crash Economics Society – A group of economics students at The University of Manchester whose belief is that the content of the economics syllabus and teaching methods could and should be seriously rethought

Vladimir Radomirović – Editor-In-Chief of pistaljka.rs (Serbia)

John Rapley – Political economist, author of ‘Twilight of the Money Gods’

Howard Reed – Economist, Director of Landman Economics

Aidan Regan – Assistant Professor, University College Dublin, School of Politics and International Relations (SPIRe)

Sheffield Political Economy Research Institute (SPERI) – An interdisciplinary research institute at the University of Sheffield that aims to develop new ways of thinking about the economic and political challenges by the current combination of financial crisis, shifting economic power and environmental threat.

Guy Standing – economist, professorial research associate, SOAS University of London, author of The Precariat: The New Dangerous Class, and The Corruption of Capitalism: Why Rentiers thrive and Work does not pay

Book Reviews

Book review by Atul K. Shah As Private Eye journalist, Richard Brooks has long been responsible for exposing corporate corruption, especially around tax avoidance and evasion. One story kept on repeating in his research – […]

Book review by David Beer Is technology undermining democracy? Do we ever really know how we arrive at our political views? The pixelated vision of the near future offered in Jamie Bartlett’s new book […]